But with Tubby Smith officially signing a new contract at Texas Tech on Tuesday (He will reportedly be making an average of $1.85 million a year over six years) – I wanted to share some leftover thoughts from a couple of former players (Current players, obviously, are not talking while the search is going on).

Blake Hoffarber (a Gopher from 2007 to 2011), was in a similar situation to current Gophers recruits Alex Foster and Alvin Ellis when he was heading into his freshman season at the ‘U.’ Hoffarber was recruited by Dan Monson, but after the 2006-07 team started 2-5, Monson was fired.

Foster and Ellis have been mostly quiet since Smith was fired, but one site reported that Ellis was upset about the lack of contact from the ‘U’ and thinking about trying to get out of his letter of intent.

“It’s always a weird time, not knowing who your coach is going to be,” Hoffarber said. “I went into that going into college. I committed to Dan Monson and then all the sudden he got fired. It’s a little nerve-racking now knowing who your coach is going to be and it’s obviously probably be someone that didn’t recruit you.”

Even so, Hoffarber didn’t rethink his commitment, he said.

“I felt like they were going to hire someone good,” he said. “I always wanted to go to the university of Minnesota. I was just curious and kind of nervous to figure out who the coach was going to be. When I found out coach Smith was going to be the coach I was a little nervous because he was more of an up-tempo style and I was not as athletic as everybody else and most of his players, but it turned out to be a good situation for me.”

Hoffarber was close with Smith, and said he tried to call him immediately after hearing that Minnesota had fired him last week – but couldn’t leave a message because the former coach’s voicemail box was full.

“So I just texted him and wished him the best of luck and sorry to hear about that and it sucks,” he said. “Anytime anyone gets fired, you never want to see that. You’ve got to think of someone as a human first and obviously people say, well he got paid, and sure he got paid, but it’s still someone’s job and livelihood and knowing you have to move – it’s a big change for someone.”

Damian Johnson (a Gopher from 2006 to 2010) also expressed surprise at Smith being fired immediately following an NCAA tournament win, but said he had seen the writing on the wall throughout the year.

“There’d been the talk the whole year basically, after the 15-1 start, the team kind of went on a downhill spiral,” he said. “I know fans got frustrated, I mean, this was the first year where the whole team was coach Smith’s players … this was a top-10 team at one point, so the whole [180] really threw everybody off and a lot of fans got restless.”

Johnson said he and Smith had a good relationship, but that wasn’t the case with all of the players. Smith’s aggressive style didn’t sit well with everyone and the coach softened his approach over the years, he said.

“Some of the former players didn’t always see eye-to-eye with coach Smith because of the style he had when he was coaching -- he was kind of a hard-nosed, old-school kind of guy, and everybody wouldn’t agree with that,” Johnson said. “To be honest, I kind of thought he softened up on the guys, on the current teams compared to the way we had it. We used to practice at 6, 7 in the morning every day and now they have 3 o'clock practices. … From what I’ve heard from the guys that are on the team currently, he’s not like he was, he eased up a little bit.”

Even so, Johnson -- who kept in touch with a lot of current players -- said Smith wasn’t the most popular guy even last year.

“Some of the players on the team, they couldn’t handle it,” he said. “The old ways wouldn’t have worked well with them. I didn’t think it was going to get to the point where everybody was going mutiny against him but I guess he maybe lost some of the guys. … He kind of got in the guys’ heads so much that they didn’t know what to do.”

Johnson said he didn’t mind that coaching style, but that it was an adjustment after being coached by Monson before Smith was hired.

“Coach Monson was the opposite of coach Smith almost, so it’s like one second you’ve got this coach, the next second you’ve got this coach coming in and it hits you at 100 miles an hour, like a punch in the face almost,” he said.

Like some of the current players, Johnson went through a coaching search heading into his sophomore season, when Monson was fired. In that situation, the transfer bug didn’t hit the team hard because more players were hopeful for a change anyway.

“When coach Monson left and we were losing, all of the guys kind of wanted a change, so that kind tempted guys to stay – there were still guys that wanted to transfer, but they wanted to see the next coach that would come in, whether they thought it was an upgrade, a coach that you could see winning and a coach that you think you could make progress with,” Johnson said.

It could be a similar situation with the Gophers.

“I think there were more guys ready for a change than not ready,” he said. “You could just see at the end of the season more guys were just unsure of themselves and not confident. When you start getting like that on the basketball court, you kind of want to see what the new guy could bring to help grow you and help build your confidence back.”

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Marcus Fuller joined the Star Tribune in 2016 after 11 years covering Gophers sports – and just about every other team and league in town -- for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Before making the Twin Cities his home, Marcus spent two years in The Kansas City Star sports department. Marcus grew up in Hawaii and is a 2002 graduate of San Jose State. Follow Fuller on Twitter @Marcus_R_Fuller.